[0001] The invention relates to methods and apparatus for detecting certain compounds. More
particularly the invention relates to methods and apparatus for detecting compounds
containing both nuclei of a first kind which exhibit nuclear magnetic resonance (nmr)
and neclei of a second kind which exhibit nuclear quadrupole resonance (nqr). Examples
of such compounds are a range of narcotics and explosives such as cocaine, heroin,
TNT, RDX and PETN.
[0002] Nuclei of the first kind usually have a spin quantum number of 1/2 and include the
nuclei ¹H, ¹⁹F, ³¹P which give rise to strong and easily detectable nmr responses
in the presence of a magnetic field. The nmr frequency of such nuclei is given by
ω=γH where ω is the angular frequency, γ is the gyromagnetic ratio specific to that
nucleus and H is the intensity of the magnetic field. The nmr frequency thus depends
on the value of the applied magnetic field. Nuclei of the second kind have a spin
quantum number greater than 1/2 and include ¹¹B, ¹⁴N, ²⁷Al, ³⁵Cl. They exhibit characteristic
frequencies known as their quadrupole resonance frequencies. These frequencies are
usually much less dependent on the intensity of the applied magnetic field. For a
given nucleus theses frequencies depend on the molecular structure within which it
is contained and therefore provide a sensitive identification of individual compounds
containing such nuclei. The examples of narcotic and explosive substances quoted above
are compounds containing both the ¹H nucleus and the ¹⁴N nucleus and the invention
is particularly useful in the detection of compounds containing these nuclei, although
the invention can also be used to detect compounds having defferent combinations of
nuclei.
[0003] It has been suggested that by causing any nqr response, if present, to change the
intensity of an induced nmr signal by transfer of energy betwen the two kinds of nuclei
the presence of substances containing both kinds of nuclei could be detected. This
phenomenon is known as double resonance and can be made to occur, for example, when
the nmr frequency is made to coincide with the nqr frequency, a condition known as
level-crossing.
[0004] One such suggestion is described in British Patent No. 2057135. In that specification
it is proposed to generate an nmr echo signal by the application of a pair of rf pulses
of appropriate frequency in a magnetic field. The magnitude of this echo signal is
measured. The magnitude of the magnetic field is then changed to a value at which
the nmr frequency coincides with the nqr frequency of a nucleus of the second kind
in a compound which it is desired to detect so shortening the nmr spin-lattice relaxation
time, a phenomenon known as cross-relaxation. The magnetic field intensity is then
returned to its initial value and a similar pair of pulses applied and the echo signal
again measured. If there has been cross relaxationwhen the intensity of the magnetic
field was at its changed value then the echo signal response after the second pair
of pulses will be different. This will indicate the presence of the compound. However,
the two-pulse sequence described in intended to generate a so called "solid-echo"
signal and to be effective the two pulses must be in phase quadrature.
[0005] Another method is described in US Patent No. 4,296,378. However the method described
there does not distinguish between substances in which cross-relaxation occurs and
those substances containing nuclei of the first kind with similar nmr spin-lattice
relaxation times.
[0006] Another suggestion for detecting the presence of certain substances is described
in published PCT Application No. WO84/04173. The method described there is based on
the assumption that in substances of interest the ¹H nuclei have long spin-lattice
relaxation times, (T₁) and short spin-spin relaxation times (T₂). Three are, however,
many hazardous materials which it may be desired to detect which do not fit into this
category. One example is ammonium nitrate in which T₁ is reatively short and T₂ is
relatively long. Another example is cocaine where T₁ is short both in high and low
magnetic fields.
[0007] It is an object of the invention to provide a method and apparatus capable of detecting
any one of a large range of compounds in which double resonance can be made to occur.
[0008] According to the invention in one aspect a method of detecting the presence of one
or more compounds containing both nuclei of a first kind which exhibit nmr and nuclei
of a second kind which exhibit nqr comprises subjecting material suspected of containing
such a compound to a magnetic field and successively and repetitively to two types
of sequence, each sequence comprising an rf pulse train at the nmr frequency of the
first kind of nucleus in the said magnetic field followed by a time interval in which
in at least one of the sequences there is a predetermined change in the magnitude
of the said magnetic field, and during the time interval in at least one of the types
of sequence applying rf signals at one or more frequencies selected so that in combination
with the aforesaid change in the magnitude of the magnetic field the subsequent nmr
signal is modified if such a compound is present, and measuring the difference in
the magnitude of the nmr signals obtained following the two types of sequence.
[0009] Where rf pulse trains are employed then these trains can comprise spin locking pulse
sequences comprising 90° pulses of the form 90° ₀-τ-(90°₉₀-2τ)n where τ is a time
delay and n is an integer of value one or more. Alternatively the rf pulses may comprise
single or multiple 90° pulses. The two types of sequence may be applied alternately.
Alternatively, a plurality of one type of sequence is first applied and is then followed
by an equal plurality of the other type of sequence.
[0010] In one embodiment of the invention the changes in the magnitude of the magnetic field
are changes to a zero or low value and rf signals at the nqr frequency of one or more
compounds which it is desired to detect are applied in the time interval of one of
the types of sequence. In addition rf signals not at the nqr frequency of any of the
compounds of interest may be applied during the corresponding time interval of the
other of the types of sequence.
[0011] In another embodiment of the invention the change in the magnitude of the static
magnetic field during one of the types of sequence is a stepped change with at least
one of the steps being held at a value in which level crossing between nuclei of the
two kinds takes place if corresponding ones of said compounds are present. The rf
signals are applied when the magnetic field reaches a zero value in order to destroy
any residual nmr signal.
[0012] In yet another embodiment of the invention the changes in the magnitude of the static
magnetic field are different in the resepective time intervals of each of the types
of sequence. One of the changes is such as to cause the nmr frequency of the first
kind of nuclei to coincide withone of the nqr frequencies of nuclei of the second
kind in a compound which it is desired to detect. Simultaneously therewith rf signals
are applied at a frequency corresponding to a different nqr frequency of such nuclei.
[0013] According to the invention on another aspect apparatus for detecting the presence
of one or more compounds containing both nuclei of a first kind which exhibit nmr
and neclei of a second kind which exhibit nqr comprises:
means for applying a magnetic field to material to be tested;
means for applying rf pulses to such material of predetermined radio frequency, intensity,
duration and phase at the nmr frequency of nuclei of the first kind;
means for temporarily changing the magnitude of the said magnetic field in a predetermined
manner;
means for applying rf signals to such materials during the time of said temporary
change of magnitude of the said magnetic field said signals being of one or more predetermined
frequencies; and
means for measuring the free induction signal from nuclei of the first kind.
[0014] In carrying out the invention separate rf coil means may be provided to which the
said rf pulses and the said rf signals respectively are applied. Two separate receiving
channels may also be provided to receive different ones of free induction signals
from nuclei of the first kind.
[0015] In order that the invention may be more fully understood reference will now be made
to the accompanying drawings in which:-
Figure 1 shows a timing diagram of rf pulses, switched magnetic field and applied
rf signals that can be used in a method embodying the invention,
Figure 2 shows in detail one rf pulse train that may be used in the method of Figure
1,
Figures 3,4 and 5 show alternative timing diagrams of pulses, switched magnetic fields
and applied rf signals used in methods embodying the invention,
Figure 6 shows apparatus embodying the invention in block diagrammatic form, and
Figures 7,8a,8b,9 and 10 give results obtained by using the apparatus of Figure 6
in accordance with one or other of the techniques shown in Figures 1,3,4, and 5.
[0016] Referring now to Figure 1, there are three parallel activities that take place, which
are labelled A, H and B. The A activity comprises the application of two types of
sequence labelled P
A and P
B. Both types of sequence include similar rf pulse trains indicated by the compsite
pulse envelope P
SL folowed by a time interval τʹ. The activity H relates to the application of a magnetic
field which is normally held at a constant value H
O but within the interval τʹ it is switched to a zero value for a time τʹp which is
less than τʹ. There is a delay time τd between the end of interval τʹp and of the
interval τʹ and a further delay time given by τʹ-τd-τʹp between the end of pulse train
P
SL and the commencement of interval τʹp. In the time interval τʹp an activity labelled
B takes place. Activity B consists of the application of an rf signal as shown by
the B line. This signal may have one or more different frequencies as will be described
hereafter.
[0017] The pulse envelope P
SL itself comprises single or multiple 90° pulses or one or more pulse trains in the
form of a multiple pulse spin-locking sequence which is shown in more detail in Figure
2. The spin-locking pulse sequence comprises a first 90° rf pulse followed by a train
of further 90° pulses whose rf phase is in quadrature with the first pulse. The first
pulse is written as 90°₀ and subsequent pulses as 90°₉₀. The time spacing between
the first pulse and the commencement of the series of 90°₉₀ pulses is τ and the time
spacing between each of the 90°₉₀ pulses of the series is 2τ. The complete pulse sequence
can therefore be written as 90° ₀-τ-(90°₉₀-2τ)n where n is an integer of value one
or more. Provided that the frequency of the rf pulses is chosen relative to the magnitude
of the applied magnetic field H₀ so as to satisfy the relationship ω=γHO where ω is
the angular frequency of the rf pulses and γ is the gyromagnetic ratio of nuclei of
the first kind, then nuclear magnetic resonance will be induced and a free induction
signal will be generate after each individual pulse of the sequence. This signal peaks
during the time interval 2τ between successive 90° pulses and its peak value is measured
and stored for later use. The entire pulse train that is shown in Figure 2 is designated
by the pulse envelope P
SL in Figure 1.
[0018] Turning now back to Figure 1 attention is directed to the line marked B which shows
the application of rf signals during the time that the magnetic field H has a zero
value. In the time interval in the sequence P
A this signal is chosen to have a frequency which is not equal to any of the nqr frequencies
of compounds suspected of being included in the material under investigation. However,
in the sequence P
B one or more frequencies are applied either simultaneously or sequentially which are
made equal to at least one of the nqr frequencies of suspected compounds.
[0019] In use of the timing diagram shown in Figure 1 the sequences P
A and P
B are applied successively and repetitively. The actual overall sequence can for example
comprise a series of P
A sequences followed by an equal series of P
B sequences, as P
AP
AP
A...P
BP
BP
B.... Alternatively the sequences can be applied alternately i.e. P
AP
BP
AP
B...
[0020] Measurements of the free induction signals for both the P
A and the P
B sequences are taken using quadrature phase-sensitive detectors and are added separately
for each sequence. The summed free induction signals may be Fourier transformed to
obtain the absorption-mode signal which is then integrated to improve the signal-to-noise
ratio. If no suspected material is present then there will be no difference in the
magnitudes of the two integrations. Howevger, if any such material is present then
there will be a difference. The existence of this difference indicates the presence
of one or more suspected compounds containing nuclei at the frequencies of the B signals
applied during pulse sequence P
B.
[0021] To facilitate understanding of the way in which the above timing diagram functions,
the two kinds of nucleus that may be present in a material being examined are termed
in the following discussions as A nuclei and B nuclei. The application of successive
and repetitive sequences P
A and P
B may generate pseudo-equilibrium conditions in the A-spin system in the sense that
the A populations are maintained away from their thermal equilibrium values. Use of
pseudo-equilibrium conditions has the advantage that the material being examined can
be immediately subject to the above described pulse sequences and there is no need
to wait for the material to acquire a finite magnetisation in the applied magnetic
field.
[0022] The magnetic field as shown in the H line in Figure 1 is cycled to zero adiabatically
but slowly enough to ensure that the population ratios of both the A and B spin systems
become equal at level crossing during the change. Level crossing will occur as the
magnetically-split A-spin levels, equal to
γAH, collapse to zero (or increase from zero) and cross over the B-spin levels, the
quadrupole interaction of which ensures a non-zero frequency, ω
B, even in zero field. At level crossing, when the condition ω
B =
γAH is satisfied, the A and B spin temperatures T
A,T
B defined by the population ratios

become equal in a time T
CP, the cross-polarisation time. The field cycling must therefore be slow enough in
this train to ensure that the time spent at the level-crossing condition be longer
than T
CP.
[0023] During the time interval τ
pʹ in sequence P
A, off-resonant rf radiation of angular frequency ω, with or without frequency modulation
may be applied, as shown by the B line in Figure 1, to the B spins in zero or low
magnetic field. Frequency ω is off-resonant with respect to the B quadrupole resonance
frequencies ω
Q. During time τ
pʹ in sequence P
B the B-spins are subject, in zero or low magnetic field, to resonant rf radiation
with or without frequency modulation at saturation level at one or more of their quadrupole
resonance frequencies ω
Q(¹), ω
Q(2), at the temperature of the object. For a three-level spin system like ¹⁴N (I=1),
with three resonant frequencies labelled ω
X,ω
y,ω
Z, usually ω
x and/or ω
Z will be saturated and the power spectrum of the B pulse can contain any number of
different ω
x (and/or ω
Z) frequencies characteristic of all nitrogen-containing compounds in the sample whose
presence is to be detected. In this way all such compounds are simultaneously irradiated.
On remagnetising adiabatically the saturated ¹⁴N (B) levels pass on their energy to
the ¹H (A) levels on level crossing. The magnetic field and irradiation cycle may
be repeated several times during the time τ
pʹ to produce multiple level-crossing and enhance sensitivity. Finally, the reduced
¹H signal is observed by a free induction signal accumulator in the time sequence
P
B relative to the corresponding signal in the time sequence P
A.
[0024] This timing sequence shown in Figure 1 is related to that used in double resonance
by level crossing experiments (drlc). The technique is particularly suitable for materials
in which both the A nuclei and the B nuclei have medium to long spin-lattice relaxation
times T₁ and with a reasonably high proportion of B nuclei to A nuclei. This occurs
for the A nucleus ¹H and the B nucleus ¹⁴N in many explosives.
[0025] For compounds in which the cross-polarisation time T
CP is long but the B nuclei are relatively abundant, as in the ¹⁴NO₂ group in some explosives,
the technique of Figure 3 may be used. In this technique the pulse train P
SL is followed by time intervals in which the magnetic field is changed as in Figure
1, but the nature of the change and the nature of the rf signals applied in the time
intervals are different. For the highest sensitivity time τʹ should be equal to or
longer than the time T₁ for the A nucleus. The magnetic field cycle is adiabatic but
may be too fast to produce equalisation of the A and B spin temperatures during level
crossing. During time τpʹ in sequence P
A the magnetic field is cycled straight to zero and simultaneously the A dipolar system
saturated with low frequency radiation, typically 10 kHz, to destroy any remaining
A magnetisation. During time τpʹ in sequence P
B the same sequence of events is used except that the field cycle is now conducted
slowly enough for equalisation of the A and B spin temperatures at level crossing
to occur e.g. by halting for a time T
CP or longer at one or more level crossing fields in which the A nmr frequency matches
in turn one or more of the B quadrupole resonance frequencies of each of the materials
to be detected, both during demagnetisation and remagnetisation. During the latter
the B nuclei quadrupole levels share their surplus populations, acquired during the
former, with the A nuclei spins in sequence, producing an
increase in the A signal. If T₁ (A) is short, time τʹ (and τd) may be made so short as to
reduce or eliminate many A responses from solids usually encountered in the objects
to be examined; only materials containing B nuclei whose quadrupole resonance frequencies
are matched at the level crossing steps will then give significant signals.
[0026] For compounds in which T₁(A)»T₁(B), τʹ can be made much shorter than T₁(A) and the
magnetic field steps, now needed on remagnetisation only, are made to last much longer
than the cross-polarisation time T
CP so that considerable re-polarisation of the A spins by relaxation recovery occurs
in the level-crossing field due to thermal contact with the B spins. Away from the
level crossing condition re-polarisation is much slower. Again, fast repetition of
the pulse units may reduce the background signal considerably.
[0027] These pulse trains may be called double resonance by adiabatic remagentisation (dram).
[0028] The technique of Figure 4 is appropriate for compounds in which the time T₁ for the
A nucleus is much longer than T₁ for the B nucleus and the B nucleus is in low abundance,
as for ¹⁴N in heroin and other narcotics. Under these circumstances, if the A Zeeman
levels are matched in low magnetic fields with a pair of quadrupole-split B levels,
after a short period T
CP in which the two spin systems come to a common spin temperature, the combined system
A+B thereafter relaxes with a spin-lattice relaxation time (T₁)
eff which is the weighted mean of the two individual relaxation times T₁(A) and T₁(B)

in which ε is equal to (or proportional to) the number ratio of B to A spins N
B/N
A. If ε T₁(A)/T₁(B)»1, the method has high sensitivity for the detection of B spins.
[0029] In this sequence as shown in Figure 4, τʹ is set close to T₁ in the field H. During
time τpʹ in sequence P
A the magnetic field is cycled adiabatically to a magnetic field in which the A magnetic
resonance frequency is close to but not equal to one of the B quadrupole resonance
frequencies characteristics of the material it is wished to detect. During time τpʹ
in sequence P
B the magnetic field is cycled to a value such that the A magnetic resonance frequency
is exactly matched to the peak B frequency response. The A-nucleus spin-lattice relaxation
is much faster during sequence P
B than during sequence P
A, resulting in a faster loss of polarisation during P
Bthan P
A and very different accumulated signals at the two detectors. This difference may
be even further increased by level crossing effects in the appropriate circumstances
e.g. when T₁(A) is short.
[0030] In a simpler version of this cycle which is applicable when the measurement field
H₀ and the cross-relaxation field H are close in magnitude, pulse evelope P
SL comprises a saturation recovery sequence of 90° pulses with separations comparable
to T₁(A) in field H₀. In sequnce P
A, the magnetic field is set to H₀ and during P
B to H for an equal time, the A nmr frequency being changed accordingly. The A-nucleus
spin-lattice relaxation is much faster during the sequence P
B than during sequence P
A, resulting in a partial recovery of the A signal during sequence P
B relative to that in P
A and different accumulated signals at the two detectors.
[0031] In another version of the cycle, the magnetic field during time τpʹ of sequence P
B is set to half the magnetic field required for matching so as to observe the narrower
two-proton relaxation jumps.
[0032] In all versions of this cycle appropriate to spin-1 B nuclei such as ¹⁴N, rf signals
are applied in time τpʹ in both sequences P
A and P
B of frequency equal to another quadrupole resonance frequency differing from that
which is being cross-relaxed. If, for example, the cross-relaxation magnetic field
is matched to one nqr frequency ω
Bʹ irradiation at another nqr frequency ω
Bʺ causes positive enhancement of the recovered A magnetisation, providing thereby
both an increase in sensitivity and a highly sensitive identification of the material
present in the object.
[0033] This technique is related to a group of methods known collectively as double resonance
by cross relaxation (drcr); it can detect ¹⁴N signals in crystalline solids, in plastics
and also in liquids and gels with long correlation times (10⁻⁵ to 10⁻⁶s).
[0034] The technique of Figure 5 is appropriate to compounds in which the quadrupolar nucleus
B has half-entegral spin (eg I=³/₂) and T₁(B) is short such as the ³⁵Cl, ³⁷Cl nuclei
in cocaine hydrochloride. During time τpʹ in sequence P
A as shown in Figure 5 magnetic field is switched as fast as possible down to or close
to zero and intense rf radiation applied at the B quadrupole resonance frequency (ω
Q) of the compound to be detected at the given temperature. During time τpʹ in sequence
P
B the cycle is the same except that the rf radiation is off-resonance by a carefully
specified shift Δ=ω-ω
Q. During the second cycle the effective frequency "seen" by the B nuclei in the rotating
frame is ω-ω
Q=Δ, and if this lies within the A dipolar absorption edge the A spins become polarised
provided that T₁(B) is short. Fast return to higher field with the minimum value of
τd "captures" this polarisation within the A Zeeman levels resulting in an enhanced
A signal if ω<ω
Q and a diminished (or inverted) A signal if ω>ω
Q. If the timing period τʹ is made so short that the A signal is saturated, any remaining
signal in zero field being destroyed by an initial burst of radiation within the A
dipolar absorption edge, the A detector will register no response as will the B detector
unless the B-nucleus whose frequency is irradiated is present. As in the technique of Figure
3 it is possible in this way to eliminate or reduce much of the background A-signal
from other A-containing materials in the object under examination.
[0035] This technique is related to experiments based on double resonance by thermal mixing
(drtm).
[0036] Apparatus suitable for carrying out the methods shown in Figures 1,3,4 and 5 is shown
in Figure 6. The apparatus has two rf channels. These channels provide the pulses
and the signals for the A activity and the B activity respectively. The A rf channel
comprises an A frequency source 1
A, a pulse programmer and gate 2
A, an rf power amplifier 3
A and a coupling network 4
A which couples the output of the rf amplifier 3
A to an rf coil 5
A. Likewise the B rf channel comprises a B frequency source 1
B, a pulse programmer and gate 2
B, an rf power amplifier 3
B and a coupling network 4
B which couples output of power amplifier 3
B to an rf coil 5
B.
[0037] The two coils 5
A and 5
B are positioned to provide rf fields to at least part of material under investigation
and in addition a dc magnet 6 of controllable intensity provides a static magnetic
field in which the material is immersed. The intensity of the magnetic field is controlled
by a magnetic field cycling control 7. Received rf signals are detected in coil 5
A and the detected signals are fed to a two channel receiver 8 and thence to either
one of two transient signal recorders 9
A and 9
B. Control of the frequency sources 1
A and 1
B, of the pulse programmers and gates 2
A and 2
B, the magnetic field cycling control 7 and the transient recorders 9
A and 9
B is carried out by means of a computer 10 which takes the signals recorded in the
transient recorders 9
A and 9
B processes them and provides an output 11.
[0038] The apparatus of Figure 6 is programmed by computer 10 to operate in accordance with
any one of the methods shown in Figures 1, 3, 4 or 5. The transient recorders 9
A and 9
B are triggered to detect the whole free induction decay signal, or in the case of
a spin-locking sequence, only at the echo maxima. In a solid these signals decay in
a time which is closer to T
1ρ than T₂, giving a much greater time for signal sampling. The sampling of the received
signal can be performed for example by pulse gated integration or by fast digitisation
and accumulation in the memory of the computer followed by Fourier transformation
and integration of the absorption signal. It is desirable to use such accumulation
techniques since the materials to be determined may be considerably diluted as, for
example, being present in luggage and their signals will therefore be reduced by the
presence of inert or harmless hydrogen-containing materials whose response is not
changed when the selected perturbation is applied to the B spin system. In the case
of a large object being examined, such a piece of luggage, it may be necessary to
examine it section by section by means of a sequentially switched array of A and B
rf coils in order to keep the power requirements for the two amplifiers 3
A and 3
B within reasonable limits.
[0039] Examples of results obtained from the use of the apparatus of Figure 6 are described
below with reference to Figures 7, 8, 9 and 10. In each case the most appropriate
one of the methods of Figures 1, 3, 4 or 5 is used. The A nuclei in each case is the
¹H nucleus. The B nucleus is ¹⁴N as present in various narcotics and explosives or
else the ³⁵Cl or ³⁷Cl nucleus present in cocaine hydrochloride.
[0040] The technique of Figure 1 detects a change in the ¹H magnetisation due to heroin
under the following conditions. In the A channel a single 90° pulse is used of pulse
width 3 µs and the ¹H free induction decay at 40.18 MHz from a 3g sample is integrated
in a box-car integrator of gate width 2µs and time constant 0.1s. The magnetic field
cycle P
AP
A...P
BP
B... is set to τʹ=4s, τpʹ=0.6s, τd=0.1s and the B channel generates an rf field of
amplitude about 0.2 mT. A change in single of about 35 mV is produced when the frequency
in the B channel is set to 4.024 or 4.063 MHz at 295K. Figure 7 shows the complete
high-frequency ¹⁴N spectrum produced by stepping the frequency after each sequence.
The line is a doublet of splitting 39 kHz and has an overall width 59 kHz. Under similar
conditions, cocaine free base ("crack") gives signals at 4.245 and 4.260 MHz of width
30 kHz at the same temperature. The invention is therefore capable of detecting and
distinguishing between these two compounds at room temperature.
[0041] The techniques of Figures 3 and 4 give strong ¹⁴NH₄+ and ¹⁴NO₃- signals from 3g samples
of ammonium nitrate under the following conditions. The A-channel setting is as in
the previous paragraph. The magentic field cycle is that described in Figure 4 with
a single ¹H 90° pulse and τʹ=5.5s, τpʹ=0.3s and τd=0.7s, the field being stepped after
each sequence. As shown in the spectrum of Figure 8a the NH₄+ signals are detected
at level-crossing magnetic fields equivalent to ¹H frequencies of 48.9, 64.8 and 116.8
KHz. With the parameters changed to give τʹ=8.6s, τpʹ=1.2s and τd as before then the
equivalent ¹H frequencies to detect the ¹⁴NO₃- ion are at 103.9, 449.1 and 549.0 kHz.
This is shown in the spectrum of Figure 8b. A two-proton relaxation jump for the latter
appears near 212 kHz and is sharp and strong enough to be used in detection. Mixtures
of (NH₄)₂SO₄ and (NH₄)NO₃ show signals from both, whose relative intensity can be
used to analyse for their relative proportions.
[0042] The techniques of Figures 1 and 5 will detect signals from ³⁵Cl, ³⁷Cl in cocaine
hydrochloride. The A channel settings are as before. The magnetic field cycle has
τʹ=5s, τpʹ=0.6s, τd=0.1s and the B channel has rf radiation whose frequency is stepped
from 1.7 to 2.8 MHz with an H₁
rot field of about 0.15 mT. The ³⁵Cl signals are seen at 2.547 MHz and the signals from
³⁷Cl at 1.998 MHz at room temperature. The complete spectrum is shown in Figure 9.
This ³⁵Cl frequency is unique to cocaine hydrochloride and is most unlikely to be
found in any other materials encountered in luggage, parcels or the like.
[0043] Figure 10 shows the v
y lines near 3,400 KHz in the ¹⁴N spectrum of the high explosive RDX. The recording
was made by the same method as was used for NH₄NO₃ but with timing settings of τʹ=50s,
τpʹ=1s and τd=0.7s.
1. A method of detecting the presence of one or more compounds containing both nuclei
of a first kind which exhibit nmr and nuclei of a second kind which exhibit nqr comprising
subjecting material suspected of containing such a compound to a magnetic field and
successive and repetitively to two types of sequence, each sequence comprising an
rf pulse or pulse train at the nmr frequency of the first kind of nucleus in the said
magnetic field followed by a time interval in which in at least one of the sequences
there is a predetermined change in the magnitude of the aid magnetic field, and during
the time interval in at least one of the types of sequence applying rf signals at
one or more frequencies selected so that in combination with the aforesaid change
in the magnitude of the magnetic field the subsequent nmr signal is modified if such
a compound is present, and measuring the difference in the magnitude of the nmr signals
obtained following the two types of sequence.
2. The method as claimed in Claim 1 in which the rf pulse train comprises a sequence
of 90° pulses.
3. The method as claimed in Claim 2 in which the pulse train comprises a spin locking
pulse sequence comprising 90° pulses of the form 90°₀-τ-(90°₉₀-2τ)n where τ is a time delay and n is an integer of value one or more.
4. The method as claimed in Claim 1 in which the rf pulse is a single 90° pulse.
5. The method as claimed in any one of the preceding claims in which the two parts
of sequence are applied alternately.
6. The method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 4 in which a plurality of one type
of sequence is first applied and is then followed by an equal plurality of the other
type of sequence.
7. The method as claimed in any one of the preceding claims in which there are predetermined
changes in the magnitude of the said magnetic fluid in both types of sequence.
8. The method as claimed in any one of the preceding claims in which the changes in
the magnitude of the magnetic field are changes to a zero or low value and rf signals
at the nqr frequency of one or more compounds which it is desired to detect are applied
in the time interval of one of the types of sequence.
9. The method as claimed in Claim 8 in which rf signals which are not at the nqr frequency
of any of the compounds of interest are applied during the corresponding time interval
of the other of the types of sequence.
10. The method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 7 in which the change in the magnitude
of the static magnetic field during one of the types of sequence is a stepped change
with at least one of the steps being held at a value in which level crossing between
nuclei of the two kinds takes place if corresponding ones of said compounds are present.
11. The method as claims in Claim 10 in which the rf signals are applied when the
magnetic field reaches zero value in order to destroy any residual nmr signal.
12. The method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 7 in which the changes in the
magnitude of the static magnetic field are different in the respective time intervals
of each of the types of sequence.
13 The method as claimed in Claim 12 in which one of the changes is such as to cause
the nmr frequency of the first kind of nuclei to coincide with one of the nqr frequencies
of nuclei of the second kind in a compound which it is desired to detect and simultaneously
rf signals are applied at a frequency corresponding to a different nqr frequency of
such nuclei.
14. Apparatus for detecting the presence of one or more compounds containing both
nuclei of a first kind which exhibit nmr and nuclei of a second kind which exhibit
nqr comprising:
means for applying a magnetic field to material to be tested
means for applying rf pulses to such material of predetermined radio-frequency, intensity,
duration and phase at the nmr frequency of nuclei of the first kind;
means for temporarily changing the magnitude of the said magnetic field in a predetermined
manner;
means for applying rf signals to such materials during the time of said temporary
change of magnitude of the said magnetic field said signals being of one or more predetermined
frequencies; and
means for measuring the free induction signal from nuclei of the first kind.
15. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 14 in which separate rf coil means are provided
to which the said rf pulses and the said rf signals respectively are applied.
16. Apparatus as claimed in Claim 14 or Claim 15 in which two separate receiving channels
are provided to receive different ones of free induction signals from nuclei of the
first kind.